Stone Kiss
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Overview
ONE DEAD.
ONE MISSING.
ONE MAN WHO CAN'T LOOK AWAY...
PRAY FOR THE DEAD.
FIGHT FOR THE LIVING.
In Los Angeles Lt. Peter Decker gets a frantic phone call from his family. A distant relative has been found naked and murdered in a seedy Manhattan hotel room and the man's niece, the last person who may have seen the victim alive, has disappeared. Crazed with worry, the girl's parents plead for Decker's help and soon he's racing across the continent to a city he hasn't seen in ten years. With few leads and less time, he plunges into New York's underbelly, a world where vile deeds, unregenerate evil, and sinister secrets pit brother against brother. And where Decker will question the very essence of his faith and fight for everything and everyone he holds dear-including his wife, Rina.
Editorial Reviews
Raw. Brutal. Ugly. And, of course, riveting. L.A. homicide detective Peter Decker, an orthodox Jew, answers a call for help from his half-brother, Jonathan, in this 14th tale (after 2001's The Forgotten) from bestseller Kellerman. Ephraim Lieber, Jonathan's brother-in-law, has been found murdered in a seedy Manhattan hotel. Ephraim's 15-year-old niece, Shaynda, who was supposed to be with him, is missing. Reluctantly, Peter agrees to fly to New York to assess the situation, advise the family and perhaps consult with the police investigating the crime. Wife Rina and daughter Hannah accompany him to make the trip something of a vacation as well. The bare questions of the case are difficult and delicate enough (had Ephraim, a recovering drug addict, backslid? was his relationship with Shaynda abusive? what part did other family relationships play?). Peter is quickly caught up in a desperate attempt to find and save the girl while battling an intransigent family, unfamiliar territory and reckless killers. Worse, his best ally in this impossible situation is Chris Donatti, first encountered in Justice (1995), a psychotic, mob-connected killer and maker of pornographic films. Whether Kellerman is depicting the ultra-Orthodox Jewish community or a pornographer's studio, she is utterly convincing. Amid the wreckage of lives taken or thrown away, Kellerman's heroes find glimmers of hope and enough moral ambiguity to make even her most evil villain look less than totally black.
Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
-- PUBLISHERS WEEKLY.
Author Information
Bio of Faye Kellerman
Faye Kellerman lives with her husband, New York Times bestselling author Jonathan Kellerman, and their children in Los Angeles, California, and Santa Fe, New Mexico.
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Additional Info
Imprint
Hachette Book Group USA
Filesize
2.37 MB
Number of Pages
528
eBook ISBN
9780446405065
Excerpt from: Stone Kiss by Faye Kellerman
1
It was the stunned, pale look of bad news. Decker immediately thought of his parents, both in their mid-eighties, and though their health wasn't failing, they had had some problems over the past year. Right away, Rina had the good sense to tell him that the family was fine.
Decker was holding his daughter's hand. Looking down at the little girl, he said, "Hannah Rosie, let me fix you up with some videos and a snack. I think Eema needs to talk to me."
"It's okay, Daddy. I can do it myself. Eema taught me how to use the microwave."
"Nine years old and ready for college." "No, Daddy, but I can use a VCR and a microwave." She turned to her mother. "I got an A on a spelling test. I didn't even study." "That's wonderful. Not that you didn't study, but that you got an A." Rina kissed her daughter's cheek. "I'll be with you in a minute." "Whatever..." Hannah left, rolling her wheeled backpack into the kitchen.
"You should sit." Decker regarded his wife. "You're colorless." "I'm all right." But she sank down into the couch, hugging a blue-and- white-checked throw pillow like a life preserver. Her cerulean eyes skittered around the living room, first landing on the lamp, then bouncing off Decker's special leather chair, onto the white wicker rocker. Anywhere but on his face.
"My parents are fine?" he asked specifically. "Perfect," Rina reiterated. "Jonathan called--" "Oh God! His mother?" "No, she's fine."
Jonathan's mother was Frieda Levine. She was also Decker's biological mother, making Jon his half brother. Ten years ago, by accident rather than by design, Decker had met up with his maternal family, which included five half siblings. Ties had been forged: more than mere acknowledgments, but less than time-tested relationships. Decker still considered his only parents to be the two people who had adopted him in infancy. "Then what's going on?"
They both heard the microwave beep. A moment later, Hannah came out, juggling a pizza bagel on a plate, a big glass of milk, and her backpack. Decker said, "Let me help you with that, sweetie."
Wordlessly, she handed her father the food and her schoolbag, skipping off to her bedroom, orange ringlets flying behind her. Like the faithful valet, Decker followed several steps behind. Rina got up, went into the kitchen, and started a pot of coffee. Nervously, she pulled off her head covering and unclipped the barrette holding a ponytail, shaking out a shoulder-length sheet of iridescent black hair. Then she tied it up again, but left the head covering off. She picked imaginary dirt off her jeans skirt, then moved on to the imaginary lint on her pink sweater. She gnawed the edge of her thumb, but that only made the hangnail worse.
Decker came back in, sat down at their cherry breakfast table--a bit scarred but still rock solid. When he carved it, he had used the best-quality wood he could find, and it showed. He took off his blue suit jacket and draped it over the back of his chair. He loosened his tie, then ran a hand through rust-colored hair heavily streaked with white. "What's with the Levines?"
"It's not the Levines, Peter; it's Jonathan's in-laws, the Liebers-- Raisie's family. There's been a terrible incident. His brother-in-law Ephraim was found dead--" "Oh no!"
"Murdered, Peter. They found him in some seedy hotel room in upper Manhattan. To add to the confusion, he was with his fifteen- year-old niece--his brother's daughter. Now, she's missing. The family's in shambles." "When did all this happen?"
"I just hung up with Jonathan about five minutes before you came home. I think they found the body around three hours ago." Decker looked at his watch. "Around 4 P.M. New York time?" "I guess."
"What was this guy doing in a 'seedy hotel room' with his fifteenyear- old niece in the middle of a school afternoon?"
A rhetorical question. Rina didn't answer. Instead, she gave Decker a slip of paper with Jonathan's phone number.
"It's horrible." Decker fingered the paper. "I feel terrible for them. But this call... Is it just a comfort call? I mean, Jon doesn't expect me to do anything, does he?"
"I don't know, Peter. I suppose he'd like you to work miracles. In lieu of that, maybe you should call him up and listen to what happened."
"He can't expect me to go out there." "I don't know. Maybe. You have a pretty good track record."
"A prisoner of my own success. I have a job, Rina. As much as my heart goes out to them--it truly is horrible--I can't leave at a moment's notice and run off to Boro Park."
"Actually, Chaim Lieber and his family live in Quinton, which is upstate. His widowed father lives there as well. Jonathan's wife, Raisie, is Chaim's younger sister. It's Chaim's daughter who's missing."











